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1
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- Demonstrate an understanding of the interdependence of organisms and the
environment.
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2
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- Biotic – what kinds of plants and animals live in it.
- Abiotic – Nonliving characteristics such as soil type, rainfall amounts,
and average temperature cycles.
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3
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- 36 Which question is valid in testing this hypothesis?
- F Do most other scientists agree with the hypothesis?
- G Could abiotic processes account for the carbon dioxide?
- H What is the percent of argon compared to carbon dioxide in the Martian
atmosphere?
- J Have the scientist’s other predictions about Mars been validated?
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4
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5
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6
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- Biosphere – The entire area of the planet that supports life.
- Biome – An area defined by specific abiotic and biotic factors.
- Community – The groups of living things in an area and how they relate.
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7
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- Symbiosis is a close relationship between two living things.
- When both are helped it is called mutualism
- When one is helped and there is no effect on the other it is called commensulism
- When one is helped and the other is harmed it is called parasitism
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8
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- Sharks are cleaned by a little fish known as a Remora. The shark never eats them since they
clean bacteria off of the shark.
Since both species are helped, this is mutualism.
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9
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- Orchids live high in tree-tops on the branches of large trees. They do not harm the tree, but they
are helped by being raised up into the sunshine and receiving water.
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10
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- Parasites harm or kill the host.
A good example is a tape worm.
It intercepts all of the hosts food, causing the host to starve
to death.
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11
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- 35 Clown fish are small reef fish that seek protection from predators by
sheltering themselves among the stinging tentacles of sea anemones.
Clown fish are very territorial and can potentially scare off predators
of sea anemones. This relationship is an example of --
- A neutralism
- B mutualism
- C parasitism
- D commensalism
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12
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13
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14
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- F sunlight
- G photosynthesis
- H oxygen
- J carbon dioxide
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15
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- At one end of the diagram are plants.
They are called producers since they are capable of turning
sunlight into food by photosynthesis.
They pass 10% of the energy they absorb to animals that eat them.
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16
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- 1st Order Consumers eat only plants and are also called
herbivores.
- 2nd Order Consumers eat only animals and are called
carnivores.
- 3rd Order Consumers animals that eat other animals, they are
also known as carnivores
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17
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18
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19
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20
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- Arrows in a food chain show the direction of energy flow.
- This is not the only feeding relationship for these organisms.
- When several or all of the food relationships are shown it’s a . . .
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21
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22
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- Food webs attempt to show all the feeding relationships in a community.
- The direction of the arrows shows the direction of energy flow.
- At the bottom of every web and every chain is a plant. These are the only things that can
turn sunshine into food.
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23
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24
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- Prey are the animals that are eaten as a food source for the . . .
- Predator This is the hunter animal. The population of the predator must be
less than the prey or they do not have enough food.
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25
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- 24 Which of the following is most likely to cause increases in a
predator population?
- F Fewer prey
- G A reduction in competition
- H More parasites
- J A period of drought
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26
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- This is the maximum number of a specific population that an area can
support with enough food and living requirements. It is shown by a line on population
graphs for a specific species.
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27
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- F competing with birds
- G making its own food
- H hiding from predators
- J running very rapidly
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28
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- H hiding from predators.
- Its not a plant, so it can’t make food.
- It has no wings, so it can not compete with birds.
- Although it has long legs, it doesn’t seem balanced for running.
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29
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- Precipitation (rain and snow) fall on plants and ground.
- Plants respire and evaporate water back into clouds.
- The ground filters the water run-off into the lakes where it evaporates
again.
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30
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- 21 The diagram shows physical
changes that
- occur in the water cycle. Which of these shows
- condensation?
- A Q
- B R
- C S
- D T
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31
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- Glucose C6H12O6 is produced by plants,
eaten by animals.
- Photosynthesis
- Animals and plants exhale CO2
which is taken in by plants to make glucose
- Cellular Respiration
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32
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33
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- Lightening and bacteria in the ground “fix” Nitrogen into a form usable
by plants.
- It is absorbed by plants, through their roots as nitrates, so they can
be used to build amino acids essential for building proteins, enzymes
and the nitrogen bases of DNA.
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34
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35
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- Ozone O3 is a protective layer at the top of the atmosphere.
- However, when it occurs near the ground, it is very harmful to all
living things, it is SMOG
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36
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- More than 90% of fresh water is locked in ice at the polar caps and in
glaciers.
- Much of the fresh water is polluted by land run-off, dumping of wastes
and excess heat directly into lakes, oceans and rivers.
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37
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- Global warming, also called
the Greenhouse Effect is caused by excess burning of fossil fuels and
destruction of our oxygen producing protista in the oceans, and
deforestation on land. Less
plants means less oxygen and more CO2.
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38
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- F Recycling cardboard boxes
- G Washing small loads of laundry
- H Driving large cars
- J Building wooden fences
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39
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- There are natural variations in all populations.
- As climate changes occur, and as pressures in terms of food, space,
shelter and predation occur, some variations allow a species to survive.
- The members who survive, reproduce causing the change to become a
characteristic of the species.
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40
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- Geographic isolation can cause two different natural variations to
become prominent causing 2 separate species.
- Reproductive isolation can have the same effect.
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41
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- A population is extinct when the last of that species is dead.
- Example: There are no more
dinosaurs.
- What happened? Their habitat was
destroyed. When they no longer
have what they need to live, they die.
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42
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- These are imprints or remains of living things.
- In undisturbed layers of sedimentary rock, the deeper it is, the older
it is.
- Give us information about extinct species.
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43
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- Homologous means they have the same origin, but may be different now.
- Example, the upper arm bones in dogs, cows, cats and monkeys.
- Analogous means they have the same function but come from different
origins.
- Example, bird wings and wings of bats.
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44
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- Viruses are not alive because they can not reproduce on their own, and
- They do not grow and develop and
- They do not exchange with their environment
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45
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- Measles, mumps, colds, influenza, Cold Sores, mononucleosis,
Epstein-Barr virus are all illnesses that are caused by a virus.
- A Virus is has a coat, a strand inside of DNA or RNA, and some type of
attachment appendage.
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46
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- Bacteria can cause illnesses too, however 90% of all bacteria is
helpful, NOT harmful.
- Without bacteria, you would not be able to make or eat cheese or ice
cream. Without them, you would be
ill most of the time.
- Strep Throat and Staph infections are examples of bacterial infections.
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47
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